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Movie Review: Brokeback Mountain (SPOILERS)

Posted on 01/16/2006 7:28:11 AM PST by mcvey

Ang Lee’s BrokeBack Mountain is a movie that, on one hand, follows fairly conventional and well-trodden ground to a legitimate conclusion (well, not quite a legitimate conclusion, see below) and, on the other hand, indulges in a series of contrived plot devices to turn (or at least attempt to turn) a rather pedestrian effort into something beyond its all-too-conventional story line. The plot is simple. In a relatively short period of time, two people, away from home, indulge in a summer romance of forbidden love. After that summer, they return to their homes and marry people who would, in the normal course of events, be their expected mates. Still, they cannot forget each other and, after a four-year hiatus, they find ways to get back together, one being married at that point, the other, not knowing his future, about to find the “almost perfect” someone. They continue to meet using a commonly-shared hobby as a means to get away from their spouses. Over the next fifteen years or so, they grab a few days here and a few days there to carry on their romance. At this point, the resemblance to “Same Time, Next Year,” and dozens of other movies about illicit loves away from home, is overwhelming. Then, after a fight, there is, for dramatic purposes I gather, a breakup. After the fight, one partner is killed for his tendency to stray over his community’s boundaries with illicit affairs. The spouse covers up what really happened. The other partner tracks down the dead man’s parents (whom he has never met) and has what can only be called an awkward moment of “good-bye.” The star-crossed love affair, in what is a bad paraphrase of “Romeo and Juliet,” ends with one partner dead and the other living a half-dead life in a beat-up trailer in the middle of nowhere. Lee does, at the very end, add a moment of regeneration, but then, drawn more to the message than the plot, leaves the move with a soggy (perhaps meant to be a tear-jerking) coda.

This is a fair summary of the plot. As such, it is no better than a “B” movie and should be treated as such. It will probably win an Academy Award since Lee uses (and I do mean “uses”) two bisexual men to make the plot seem remarkable. It is not remarkable and it is a shame that this hackneyed piece is getting so much attention. It suggests why foreign films are just simply so much better than American films these days. This is not to say it is terrible—but it is more Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan as written by someone with severe depression than it is Baudelaire. I find Hanks and Ryan amusing, this I found boring and I emerged feeling used myself. Not completely, though. The photography is excellent and some of the shots are beautifully framed—one scene where one partner disappears into the dark with a male prostitute is absolutely first-class film-making. Similarly, the acting by Heath Ledger (Ennis) and Michelle Williams (Ennis’s wife, Alma) is excellent. His partner Jake Gyllenhaal’s portrayal of the more volatile Jack is slightly over the top, but not enough to really distract. And, in fairness to Gyllenhaal, the writing for his part is thinner than for the others.

The plot twists intended to move the movie along, however, do a disservice to the rest of the film. Ennis and Jack meet after four years of absence. So the two men begin to kiss madly along a busy avenue of a town. Since Ennis has already informed us that gay men get killed for being even slightly open about their gayness, this is bizarre behavior. It appears to be Ang Lee’s attempt to demonstrate that two men well into their twenties, who know that they are engaged in a dangerous activity, are as brainless as two smitten thirteen-year olds. It insults and demeans the characters. We already know that they are impassioned lovers. During this scene of intense passion, the wife of Ennis, sees the longest kiss since the original “Thomas Crown Affair.” She, besides feeling badly, does nothing. I am guessing here, but if this is Ang Lee’s attempt to show that she is a culturally submissive wife, it does not fit into the rest of the plot, nor the strong character she has already displayed. She eventually refuses relations with Ennis on the reasonable grounds that he will not use contraception and that, until he shows he is serious about supporting his family, she will have no more children. Lee turns this very sensible and reasonably dramatic moment into a pathetic plot device whose sole purpose is to move the Ennis-Jack story along, since the next scene is divorce court. This leaves Ennis free and allows Lee to set up a scene where Jack can feel jilted since Ennis, although divorced, will not join him in setting up a farm where the two can live together—something that they have previously ruled out. This scene, however, allows Jack to state that his father-in-law would pay him to leave his daughter. And this in turn sets up a scene to assert, for the second time, the cliché that strong men are boors. (All the men who hold responsible jobs in this movie are portrayed as boors.) This leads in turn to an incredibly amateurish scene where son-in-law and father-in-law battle over television and child discipline during—you guessed it—Thanksgiving. (They also battle over who cuts the turkey—a scene where Lee simply abandons any pretense to skilled filmmaking, grabs a roller and lathers it on.) I could go on, but this would make this review far too long—just like the movie. Fundamentally, the plot is so thin that all that holds it up are the gimmicks—one, gay men; two, irrational and disconnected plot devices; and three, gaps where those wanting to believe this is great film can read in whatever they wish.

The ending is from desperation. Jack is shown being killed by gay bashers (a much more accurate term than the presently PC “homophobe.” By the way, the odds on a gay male being killed in a gay-bashing incident are between 1 in 50,000,000 and one in 150,000,000.) Some of his ashes go to his parents. The father of Jack (another hard-working and boorish male) refuses the request from a complete stranger to take his son’s ashes and dump them on a far-off mountain. Strangely enough and quite selfishly (this is sarcasm, folks), the father wishes to bury the ashes of his son in the family cemetery. But the father is portrayed as a hostile mean-spirited old farmer. (I could not help but notice that this male had kept a hardscrabble farm going through the twenty years the film covers.) He also tells Ennis that his son had taken up with another man—which, since the two had broken up, adds nothing but—I don’t know what—to the plot. Out next scene is the aforementioned trailer where Ennis’s nineteen-year old daughter drives up to tell him she is getting married. At first, for reasons where are just beyond my understanding, Ennis does not get the name of the fiancé correct, confusing him with an boyfriend the daughter had two years earlier. Then he starts to say he has to go herding rather than going to her wedding. He then relents in what I guess is supposed to be a reassertion of his psychological self. Then after his daughter leaves, he goes over to closet where there is a picture of Brokeback Mountain and begins to talk to his now dead ex-lover. This, I guess, suggests the emotional tie between the two. If so, it is clumsy beyond words, a further hammering of the point made even before the two men were locked in amorous embrace on the staircase with the wife watching.

The writing is not bad, but the plotting is dreadful. The wife of Jack (Lureen Newsome) almost develops into a real character and not just a foil to Jack. Her role could have been truly fleshed out with just a few more lines and touches of color. The wife of Ennis could have been made more believable (it takes her years, a divorce and a remarriage to a soft and gentle man, to reveal to Ennis—at Thanksgiving once again—that she had laid traps for her husband to see if the “fishing trips” he and Jack went on were really “fishing trips.”) Since she had seen their passionate kissing on the open staircase, this makes her the dumbest person on the face of the earth, but since we already know she’s not, this scene proves—what ? I suppose my greatest objection is that all the folks in the movie are stereotypes of what Hollywood actually thinks the people in the middle of the country are like. It is patronizing to the audience and disdainful of the characters. It is not a terrible movie, but it is not anywhere close to being worthy of an Oscar nomination, much less an Oscar. If it had, like “Crash” gone from logical premise to logical result, we might have had a fine movie. As it is, it is about a two-and-a-half star movie.

McVey


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: bmovies; brokebackmountain; hollyweird; homosexualagenda; movierevews; moviereview; publicists; spoilers
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To: mcvey

To the hard core, agenda driven left, any movie that shows two men humping is automatically a 'masterpiece'; it's a sure fire way to avoid any objective examination. The 'race' card and the 'homophobe' card are sacred cows, and some of the many devices the left uses to avoid honest, thoughtful discussion.


101 posted on 01/16/2006 9:00:32 AM PST by Spok (Est omnis de civilitate.)
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To: veronica
Here is all I did....

http://www.imdb.com/chart/

I also Googled it and saw the same numbers. Just look at the other movies on the top ten and their weekly totals. All I am suggesting is that despite your theater (and I am sure if I went to Madison, Wisconsin those theaters would be packed too), this movie is not doing all that well.

102 posted on 01/16/2006 9:00:39 AM PST by irish guard
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To: peyton randolph

There is no such thing as a bisexual man.


103 posted on 01/16/2006 9:00:56 AM PST by MAWG (In the shadows, on permanent ambush duty.)
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To: veronica

I would agree with that. Maybe a slighty younger crowd by in large, but mostly what you would expect to see at any movie.

I was just taking offense to a reply by Quilla to something I had posted above.


104 posted on 01/16/2006 9:01:22 AM PST by OpusLifeJune
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To: Quilla

Oh I see. Now I feel so much better.


105 posted on 01/16/2006 9:03:06 AM PST by OpusLifeJune
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To: Joe 6-pack

Ternce Hill rocks.

As a teen, I spent days trying to figure out how to attach a rocking chair to my saddle....:))


106 posted on 01/16/2006 9:10:18 AM PST by Salamander (Cursed With Second Sight)
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To: WhiteGuy

"Is it a compulsion, an obsession, or maybe a deeply repressed attraction driven by their secret private feelings?"

Ah yes, I'm secretly gay and am all nervous about it.

Not quite, there have already been something like 20 or more posts of articles about "Brokeback Mountain" here. I think it's been covered. I don't think 20 postings about this movie is just "the slightest whiff", it's overkill.


107 posted on 01/16/2006 9:10:39 AM PST by garyhope (Happy, healthy, prosperous New Year to all good Freepers and our brave military.)
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To: MAWG

Brokeback Mountain, where men aren't men and sheep run scared!


108 posted on 01/16/2006 9:11:25 AM PST by Right_Handed_Writer
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To: atomicpossum

Wasn't Planes, Trains and Automobiles actually a thinly-disguised love story?


109 posted on 01/16/2006 9:13:06 AM PST by Old Professer (Fix the problem, not the blame!)
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To: irish guard

It's doing very well on a per-theater basis. Check this out...

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/movies/box_office.php?sort=gross_per_venue&rank_id=811.

Each of it's five weeks out its been at or near the top in the per theater gross.


110 posted on 01/16/2006 9:13:57 AM PST by OpusLifeJune
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To: Salamander

You would be amazed at how many times in real life I've been able to use the line, "I saw him set those pancakes on fire!"


111 posted on 01/16/2006 9:14:38 AM PST by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum.)
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To: CROSSHIGHWAYMAN

You know, I keep hearing about how great his movies are and I just don't see it.

"A Beautiful Mind" was a beautiful bore in my opinion. A complete waste of 2 hours.


112 posted on 01/16/2006 9:14:57 AM PST by subterfuge (The Democrat party--hating American ideals for 60 years.)
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To: garyhope

Actually, for all other threads about these gay sheepherders, this is teh first actually describing the "movie" - as a piece of lousy "movie", rather than a movie critic's "worship at the house of anti-christian-homo-feelilia"


113 posted on 01/16/2006 9:17:39 AM PST by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but Hillary's ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: garyhope

It can hardly be overkill. If it were, we would not be up in the 100+ range on this thread.

This reminds me of when students say "why should I write a new diet book--there are already so many." Well, the reason there are so many is because in a free economy people have the right to keep buying, because they are interested and people have the right to keep writing because they want to sell books.

FR is for the free market less time I checked?

McVey


114 posted on 01/16/2006 9:19:01 AM PST by mcvey
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To: mcvey; All
The next film to 'come out'?

Based on a true story: Broke molar on Oral-eo cookie.


115 posted on 01/16/2006 9:19:47 AM PST by AWestCoaster (Liberal: like a slinky...it brings a smile to your face when you push 'em down the stairs)
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To: Joe 6-pack

LOL!

I was just reading his bio on imdb.com.
I never knew he was Italian.
He's still kicking, producing, directing and lives in MA.

Good on him!....:)

They just ran My Name Is Nobody on TV last week.

Great classic stuff.

[then I got all nostalgic for the days when we still had drive-ins around here]


116 posted on 01/16/2006 9:21:01 AM PST by Salamander (Cursed With Second Sight)
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To: Robert A. Cook, PE

Which is the point of the whole exercise. If you talk about the movie on political grounds, then no one sees the movie--they see politics. If you look at it as a movie though, you can get in under the stereotypes and shortcuts Ang Lee and the writers took and see what they mean.


117 posted on 01/16/2006 9:21:26 AM PST by mcvey
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To: pinz-n-needlez

Take your family to see End of the Spear. It's a true story about five male missionaries who were killed in Ecuador, I think, bringing the gospel or trying to, to the tribe there. The tribe was the most vicious of any in the world. After they all were killed, Elisabeth Elliot and her family plus the other missionary wives, went to the tribe and led them to Christ. This is a true story and something our young people need to see.


118 posted on 01/16/2006 9:21:38 AM PST by Marysecretary (Thank you, Lord, for FOUR MORE YEARS!!!)
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To: mcvey

A sheepboy who lived in Khartoum
took a lesbian up to his room.
They argued a lot,
About who should do what,
And how, and with which, and to whom.

`Brokeback Mountain II', the sequel: Enter the sheep.


119 posted on 01/16/2006 9:21:58 AM PST by tumblindice
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To: mcvey

Homophonic trip?


120 posted on 01/16/2006 9:22:53 AM PST by Old Professer (Fix the problem, not the blame!)
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